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Local victim served for 9 years as a SEAL
By Stephen Dove San Antonio Express-News Web Posted : 10/16/2003 12:00 AM The San Antonio native killed in Wednesday's Mideast blast called the Alamo City his home but spent much of his time traveling the world. John Branchizio died just two days after his 37th birthday when the SUV he was riding in was ripped apart by a bomb in the Gaza Strip. He was a member of a security detail assigned to U.S. Embassy diplomats in the area. His aunt Kelly Shaw said Branchizio worked for Dyncorp, a subsidiary of Computer Sciences Corp. that contracts with the State Department for security services. Shaw said her nephew, a 1985 Roosevelt High School graduate, had a patriotic spirit and spent nine years as a Navy SEAL after finishing college in Arkansas. "He had a fierce dedication to his country and believed what he was doing was thoroughly important," she said. "He told his mother when he became a SEAL that he may die young, and he did." As a SEAL, Branchizio worked in Central and South America. In recent years, she said, he trained air marshals in hand-to-hand combat techniques. Branchizio was divorced and had an 8-year-old son who lives in Virginia, Shaw said. She said Branchizio last visited San Antonio in April but called family regularly when he was overseas and considered the Alamo City his "home base." He was scheduled to return to San Antonio in November before taking a new assignment, she said. "He was going to be going to Iraq after November," she said. "He was excited about that." Shaw said the family has been overwhelmed by the number of friends who have called from all over the world with memories of Branchizio. "John was always one of these little wild childs, with no fear," she said. "He was always so dynamic and outgoing. He would suck the oxygen right out of the room." Shaw said Branchizio was a competitive swimmer, triathlete and marathon runner. His father, Ralph Branchizio Jr., is a noted local running coach. His mother, Jeanette Branchizio, is a biology teacher at Alamo Heights High School. The Branchizio family also is well known as San Antonio restaurateurs. His grandfather opened Branchizio's Naples Restaurant on Broadway in 1952, and it remained a San Antonio institution for more than three decades. Branchizio's younger brother, Chris, is scheduled to open a new incarnation of the restaurant in Bulverde today. That will go on as scheduled, said Glenn Franson, a partner in the new restaurant. Franson said John Branchizio was the center of most family conversations and was respected by everyone who knew him. "His younger brother, Chris, looked up to him and thought he hung the moon," Franson said. "He was absolutely a hero to Chris and the other family members. "I think it goes beyond being in the military. I think it was the individual Chris looked up to. I think it was one of these people that was larger than life." A service time has not been announced. Arrangements are being made by Colonial Chapel Hills Funeral Home and Memorial Chapel. Shaw said Branchizio will be buried at Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery |
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More on Cheez
washingtonpost.com
Bomb Kills 3 Americans In Gaza Strip Guards Were Escorting U.S. Diplomatic Convoy By Molly Moore and John Ward Anderson Washington Post Foreign Service Thursday, October 16, 2003; Page A01 BEIT LAHIYA, Gaza Strip, Oct. 15 -- A huge bomb exploded Wednesday beneath a car full of security guards escorting a U.S. diplomatic convoy through the northern Gaza Strip, killing three Americans and injuring one, U.S. officials said. The blast, which ripped apart the armor-plated vehicle and flipped it upside down, was the first fatal attack on U.S. officials or diplomats in the Palestinian territories or Israel during the three-year-old Palestinian uprising. U.S. and other foreign diplomats said the bombing could signal a dramatic shift in the targets and politics of the conflict. The State Department identified the dead Americans as John Branchizio, 36, Mark T. Parson, 31, and John Martin Linde Jr., 30. Their home towns were not released, but all were employees of DynCorp, a Reston-based government contractor that provides security services to the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv. "We are shocked by this latest terrorist outrage," U.S. Ambassador Daniel C. Kurtzer said at a news conference in Tel Aviv. Kurtzer said "we don't know" whether the attack was aimed at Americans. While there was no immediate, credible claim of responsibility for the attack, some Israeli and Palestinian officials said it appeared to have been carried out by someone who knew that U.S. officials were in the convoy and deliberately targeted them. The two large, silver Chevrolet sport-utility vehicles in the four-vehicle convoy bore no markings indicating that they belonged to Americans, but they were easily recognizable as the type of car U.S. diplomats use when they travel in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, U.S. and Israeli officials said. The attackers "would have known that this was not just a diplomatic convoy but an American one, because the cars and the colors of the cars were well-known," said Zalman Shoval, a former Israeli ambassador to the United States and a senior adviser to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. "It's a new development and a more far-reaching development. But that America is seen as an enemy by these Palestinians who engage in terrorism is nothing new." Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat condemned "this ugly crime targeting American observers as they were on a mission for security and peace." "We strongly condemn this incident and we will conduct an investigation and we will follow it to find the source of this attack," Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia told reporters in the West Bank. In Washington, President Bush laid blame for the attack on the Palestinian leadership. "Palestinian authorities should have acted long ago to fight terror in all its forms," he said. Secretary of State Colin L. Powell told Qureia in a telephone call that the United States expected full cooperation in investigating "this heinous act and in bringing these murderers to justice," according to State Department spokesman Richard Boucher. Saeb Erekat, a member of Qureia's cabinet, said that Palestinian security officials had begun an investigation of the incident, and he offered to investigate it jointly with the United States. The U.S. Embassy issued a notice advising American citizens to leave the Gaza Strip and said an FBI team was being dispatched to investigate the incident. The attack occurred at about 10:15 a.m. (4:15 a.m. EDT) Wednesday, five hours after the United States vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution that would have condemned Israel for building a controversial fence around the West Bank, and as Israeli soldiers in the southern Gaza Strip continued a six-day-old operation to destroy cross-border tunnels. Eight Palestinians have been killed and more than 230 homes have been destroyed or severely damaged in that operation. The bomb detonated as the convoy was about 11/2 miles inside the Gaza Strip from the Erez crossing at the Israeli border. They were driving along the pockmarked, partially blacktopped road that runs the length of the Gaza Strip and is frequently used by foreigners -- diplomats, aid workers, journalists and others -- as well as by local Palestinians. According to witnesses and U.S. Embassy officials, a Palestinian security team led the convoy in one car, the American security guards occupied the second vehicle, at least two U.S. diplomats were in the third, and another Palestinian police car brought up the rear. The diplomats in the third car had been planning to interview Palestinian academics who had applied for Fulbright scholarships to study or teach in the United States, said Kurtzer, the U.S. ambassador. U.S. diplomats, always accompanied by security personnel, travel frequently to Gaza, he said. "I heard a huge explosion," said Hashan Asaleyah, who lives in a white concrete house with sky-blue doors a dozen feet from the road. "We ran to the balcony and saw a car upside down and smoking. I saw three bodies. One was in pieces." Emergency workers collected body parts from across the pavement and the dirt and wrapped them in white sheets, working gingerly around large pools of blood. Witnesses said that one of the bloodied victims stumbled out of the car but died a short time later. "We tried to save them; some were only wounded," said Imad Taha, 23, a textile laborer who said he lives nearby. The twisted carcass of the once-sleek Chevy lay on its back next to the 31/2-foot-deep hole that the bomb left in the red clay roadbed. Its front end was ripped off and its undercarriage splayed open. The axle had snapped like a toothpick. Chunks of foam from seat cushions and plastic molded drink holders littered the ground. When two U.S. investigators arrived to photograph the wreckage and the eight-foot-wide crater left by the explosion, a mob of Palestinian boys and young men hurled rocks at them. The two visibly frightened men climbed back into their vehicles as Palestinian security officers fired their guns into the air in an effort to control the unruly, chanting crowd. U.S. officials said the vehicle had armor plating on its roof and sides, but said they did not know whether the vehicle was equipped with armor on its underside to protect against land mines. Israeli officials estimated that the bomb, which was buried in the hardpan roadbed, might have weighed more than 100 pounds. A smaller bomb planted on another road in the northern Gaza Strip exploded under an Israeli military all-terrain vehicle Wednesday morning, injuring three soldiers, according to an Israeli military spokesman. The spokesman said the two incidents were not believed to be related. Homemade bombs concocted from petroleum products, sugar, cosmetics, shampoo and varying amounts of TNT are commonly used by militants in the Gaza Strip. The explosives are frequently planted in potholes or beneath roadbeds on routes used by Israeli military vehicles and have been used to blow up 50-ton tanks as well as lighter vehicles. Some of the explosives are detonated on impact when a vehicle rolls over them; others are more sophisticated and are set off by remote control. A gray cable hanging into the crater left by Wednesday's attack on the U.S. vehicle suggested that the bomb might have been ignited by remote control from a nearby concrete hut. Until Wednesday, foreign diplomats and international officials had been considered largely off-limits by Palestinian militant groups, which stressed that their conflict was against Israel. The two largest groups -- Islamic Jihad and the Islamic Resistance Movement, known as Hamas, which are both headquartered in Gaza -- denied responsibility for the bombing. However, as Israel has demolished homes, assassinated suspected terrorists and established checkpoints and closures in the Palestinian territories in response to Palestinian suicide bombings, Palestinians -- particularly in the Gaza Strip, where sentiments are more strident and radical -- have grown increasingly angry with the U.S. government for offering no criticism of Israel. American policy "is one-sided in favor of Israel and against us," said Jihad Amari, 17, a high school student who was among the crowd of young Palestinians who threw rocks and stones at the U.S. investigators at the scene of the blast. Anderson reported from Tel Aviv. Staff writer Dana Priest in Washington contributed to this report. © 2003 The Washington Post Company |
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From his hometown paper....
http://news.mysanantonio.com/story.c...40&xlc=1073409
San Antonian killed in Mideast is buried By Stephen Dove San Antonio Express-News Web Posted : 10/23/2003 12:00 AM Throughout nearly two hours of a funeral Wednesday, 8-year-old Tyler Branchizio showed the same steadfast resolve that endeared his dad to so many people around the world. A mourner pays her last respects to John Branchizio after his funeral. Branchizio, a native San Antonian, was killed last week in a bomb attack in the Gaza Strip and buried Wednesday. Gloria Ferniz/Express-News But in the end, when an officer presented him with a crisply folded U.S. flag in honor of his fallen father, even the strength of a Navy SEAL could not have held back the tears. Tyler's flood of emotion was shared by hundreds of mourners who packed a North Side church and later a pavilion at Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery to honor the life of John Branchizio, 37, a former SEAL who died Oct. 15 in the Gaza Strip. Branchizio, a San Antonio native and 1985 graduate of Roosevelt High School, was killed when a bomb ripped apart the armored car he was riding in as part of a U.S. Embassy security detail. Two other Americans also died in the blast, including San Antonio resident John Linde Jr. At the time, all three men were working for government security contractor DynCorp. Branchizio was buried with full military honors Wednesday after a funeral at Sunset Ridge Church of Christ. The Rev. Roy Osborne, who officiated, praised Branchizio as "a great young man and a great American." "John lived more in 37 years than most of us live in 80," the retired pastor said as he looked over the flag-draped casket. "When he joined the SEALs he said, 'I will probably die young.' But he joined something he believed in." Branchizio served as a SEAL for nine years before he began taking State Department security jobs overseas. During his years of military service, Branchizio was named to the SEALs' Gold Team, reserved for the best members of the elite unit. "When he earned that honor, his family said he called home and was so excited that he didn't really need a telephone for that transcontinental call," Osborne told the audience. Several SEALs who served with Branchizio attended the service and said they remembered him for his larger-than-life personality. Friend Tony Parisi said everything Branchizio did, including working in the most dangerous corners of the world, was driven by his competitive spirit and love for family and country. "John always had a gusto, a bravado about him, that really kind of defined who he was," Parisi said. "His willingness to go into those situations just showed what kind of character he had," Parisi added. Osborne said Branchizio will be remembered best by friends and family for his ability to build relationships. "You didn't meet John Branchizio, you encountered him," he said. Osborne said many of Branchizio's co-workers in Israel referred to him as "the mayor of Tel Aviv" because he was on a first-name basis with many officials and merchants in the city where he was stationed. At a news conference the day of the blast, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher emphasized that even though Branchizio and the others killed were contract workers, department officials considered all three men "part of the embassy and part of the team." That sympathy was emphasized at the service, which was attended by officials from Israel, the State Department, the FBI, the CIA, local law enforcement agencies and several private security companies. A local running club coached by Branchizio's father, Ralph, is sponsoring a 14-mile charity run at 7:30 a.m. Sunday in McAllister Park to benefit Tyler's college fund. Donations will be accepted; there is no entry fee. The family also asked that any donations in Branchizio's memory be sent to Memorial Fund: Jeanette Branchizio, 5235 Prince Valiant, San Antonio 78218; or The Luther World Relief, P.O. Box 17061, Baltimore, Md. 21298-9832. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- sdove@express-news.net |
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Trident, I am sickened by the loss of another great man. Thank you for posting this information so that we may know we've lost another one.
My love and prayers are with the family. Rest easy, SEAL. You will be missed. |
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